If you were POTUS how would you handle the ISIS situation?

Robbie3000

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You must have missed the part about encouraging followers to bomb US malls. I don't want us to be part of a fight we shouldn't be in either but someone is threatening to throw rocks at your house you gotta step in somehow.

We automatically stop being targets just by staying out of the situation. The only reason we have a problem with terrorists is because of our meddling in what they consider internal affairs. The whole "They hate us because of our freedoms" is just bullshyt being peddled to scare/inflame the public.
 

the cac mamba

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We automatically stop being targets just by staying out of the situation. The only reason we have a problem with terrorists is because of our meddling in what they consider internal affairs. The whole "They hate us because of our freedoms" is just bullshyt being peddled to scare/inflame the public.
yep, im all for staying the fukk out of the middle east, and that includes our support of israel :scusthov:
 

nalej

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We automatically stop being targets just by staying out of the situation. The only reason we have a problem with terrorists is because of our meddling in what they consider internal affairs. The whole "They hate us because of our freedoms" is just bullshyt being peddled to scare/inflame the public.

Fair point but I think it's too late for that now. They're not just gonna to forget us and let us move along our happy ways.
 

Piff Perkins

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Nothing.

I'd let Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria figure it out. Tired of these dudes not handling their own business. If I were president with unlimited power, the days of the US policing the world would be over.

Same. Pretty much what Barry is doing. Let the ME police the ME. ISIS is making it easy by pissing them off. I'd provide any intelligence or satellite support they need.

I got a bad feeling tho brehs...all it'll take is one mall getting shot up by a brown person for this country to go insane. And people will blame Obama.
 

88m3

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:mjlol:

I'd argue we have been the greatest source of instability in the world since WW2.

So you're of the camp that knows that blacks would be better off under Hitler? Communist programs perhaps too, I'll assume...

I won't agree.
 

Robbie3000

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So you're of the camp that knows that blacks would be better off under Hitler? Communist programs perhaps too, I'll assume...

I won't agree.

Don't be a dikk. You know very well I meant post WW2.
 

Scientific Playa

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How insightful :mjlol:

the berlin wall came down, the cold war ended, but the u.s. pentagon budget continued to grow.

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Berniewood Hogan

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http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/23/middleeast/isis-crisis/

Egypt's President: It's time for an Arab coalition against ISIS

140608062155-abdel-fattah-el-sisi-horizontal-large-gallery.jpg

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi says the need for a unified Arab force against ISIS becomes "more pressing every day."

(CNN)As ISIS continues it murderous rampage in the Middle East, Egypt's President said it's time for more Arab countries to join forces against the terror group.

"The need for a unified Arab force is growing and becoming more pressing every day," Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi said in a televised speech Sunday.

El-Sisi said Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have offered military help as Egypt amplifies its battle against ISIS in neighboring Libya.

CNN military analyst Maj. Gen. James "Spider" Marks said "it's about time" an Arab leader like el-Sisi made such a statement.

"Strategically and politically for the region, this is a big deal, and it's absolutely the right first step," the retired U.S. Army officer said.

El-Sisi's statement came after U.S. President Barack Obama called for other countries last week to step up their efforts in the fight against ISIS.

The United States is leading a coalition to fight ISIS from the sky over Iraq and Syria. But according to U.S. Central Command, 80% of the airstrikes have been conducted by the United States; the other 20% were launched by other coalition countries.

And there's serious doubt about whether airstrikes alone will eliminate ISIS.

"The airstrikes aren't going to get the job done," CNN law enforcement analyst Tom Fuentes told CNN's "New Day." "We need the Arab states to be the ones to eventually put the boots on the ground. Whether they actually end up doing it and being dedicated to this, we'll have to see."

What's missing
El-Sisi didn't specify exactly what he meant by a "united Arab force" and whether that means troops on the ground.

The idea of a pan-Arab force has been talked about for generations. But past efforts have been marred by distrust among Arab nations.

Now, they have a common enemy in ISIS, a formidable regional threat.

Beyond Iraq and Syria
ISIS was initially known for trying to establish an Islamic State across parts of Iraq and Syria, and it has captured swaths of land in both countries.

But the group is expanding its reach.

Last week, ISIS released a gruesome video that appeared to show militants beheading 21 Egyptian Christians on a Libyan beach. In response, Egypt launched a series of airstrikes against ISIS in Libya.

But in his speech Sunday, el-Sisi said the Egyptian army isn't trying to invade foreign territory.

"Your armed forces only protect the people of Egypt, and we coordinate with our Arab brothers," he said.

Who's doing what in the coalition battle against ISIS?

Peshmerga fighters in cages
As world leaders talk about what to do about ISIS, the militants' atrocities and threats carry on.

On Saturday, ISIS released a new propaganda video showing what appears to be Kurdish Peshmerga fighters paraded down Iraqi streets in cages atop pickup trucks.

The video features a man saying the Peshmerga soldiers were captured by ISIS. CNN cannot independently verify the authenticity of the video.

A man with a microphone bearing the ISIS logo interviews some of the captives. The prisoners, under duress, call on their fellow Peshmerga soldiers to give up their fight against ISIS.

Watch: Who are the Peshmerga?

The heavily edited footage also includes flashback images of the beheadings of the Christian Egyptians.

The man in the video gives an ominous warning:

"We say to the Peshmerga: Leave your jobs, or your fate will be like these, either the cage, or under the ground."
 
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